An organization founded in 1826 in Boston to encourage people to quit drinking liquor and limit other alcoholic beverages.
The American Temperance Society
Tis act was passed in October 1919 to enforce the 18th amendment.
Young women who liked to break social rules and flaunt their latest fashions were called
Flappers
A musician from New Orleans who also went by the names Satchmo or Pops.
Louis Armstrong
To make sure that rules or laws are obeyed.
Enforce.
An organization founded in 1874 in Cleveland, Ohio. The main goal was to promote an alcohol - and - free society and improve the country's morals.
Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU)
Businesses that illegally sold alcohol during Prohibition.
Speakeasies.
True or False:
During the 1920s, the role of women changed causing their fashion to become more conservative.
False
A painter who was heavily inspired by the Great Migration.
Jacob Lawrence
A form of language that is spoken in a particular area or by a particular group of people.
Dialect
By 1879 many members of the WCTU wanted to add this right for women to their goals.
Suffrage
Name one of the products that became popular during this time.
Household appliances, cars, radios
African American Cultural Movement of the 1920s and early 1930s that centered in the Harlem neighborhood of New York City.
The Harlem Renaissance
To cancel or undo something, often a law.
Repeal
What were the names of people who were for and against prohibition?
Wets and Drys
A popular speakeasy in the Harlem speakeasy that featured musical acts and dancers.
The Cotton Club
To illegally move something in secret.
Smuggle
This amendment enacted Prohibition, making it illegal to manufacture, transport, and sell alcoholic beverages in the United States.
The 18th Amendment
True of False: All of the literary styles were the same during the Harlem Renaissance.
False
A new growth of activity or interest in something, especially art, literature, or music.
Renaissance